Mystic Mantra: Are superstitions real?

It simply depends on how sensibly, intelligently, and with how much awareness you walk and look at life around you.

Instead of creating the necessary inner and external atmosphere around us where the right kind of situation can happen, we always look for something else which could make that happen. (Representational image)

A few years ago, a lady I knew was preparing for an important business meeting. In Tamil Nadu, many people believe that when you start your car in the morning, you should not start in reverse gear. Otherwise your whole life will go into reverse gear. So, in the morning they always move it a little forward. So, she wanted to move the car forward before reversing out of the house. In all her anxiety and fear, while trying to move it a few inches forward, she jerked the clutch and drove the car straight through the wall into the bedroom!

Instead of creating the necessary inner and external atmosphere around us where the right kind of situation can happen, we always look for something else which could make that happen. How you experienced today within yourself is definitely in your hands. It is not decided by what superstitions you believe in. It simply depends on how sensibly, intelligently, and with how much awareness you walk and look at life around you.

So, is there no truth in any superstitions? Not necessarily. Most of them have some scientific basis but they have been badly distorted over time. From generation to generation the science has lost its shape and become something else. Moreover, today, because of political and other kinds of dominance, we have come to the conclusion that if something comes from the West it is science, and if it comes from the East it is superstition.

For example, in the last few years, a phenomenal amount of research has gone into water. Scientists are saying that water has memory. It remembers whatever it comes in touch with. If I take a glass of water in my hand, look at it in a certain way and give it to you, wellbeing will come to you. If I look at it another way and give it to you, you will fall sick. Our grandmothers always told us we must receive food and water only from people who love and care for us. When your grandmother told you this, it was superstition. If you hear about it from scientists in the US, you take it seriously. This is a kind of slavery.

Many of the things we have always said in this culture are being discovered today after billion-dollar research studies, as “great” discoveries about human nature. We have always known these things because this is not a culture which evolved out of the compulsions of living. This is a culture which was evolved consciously by sages and saints. There is immense scientific value in it. Unfortunately, the spiritual culture we see today has in many ways been broken by invasions and distorted by long spells of poverty. Still, the basic ethos of the spiritual process is not destroyed, nor can it be destroyed. It is time we reap the benefits of this profound tradition in its full glory.

Ranked amongst the fifty most influential people in India, Sadhguru is a yogi, mystic, visionary and bestselling author. Sadhguru has been conferred the “Padma Vibhushan”, India’s highest annual civilian award, by the Government of India in 2017, for exceptional and distinguished service.